Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

Free-paced high-performance brain–computer interfaces

Neil Achtman1, Afsheen Afshar1,2, Gopal Santhanam1, Byron M Yu1, Stephen I Ryu1,3 and Krishna V Shenoy1,4

Show affiliations


Neural prostheses aim to improve the quality of life of severely disabled patients by translating neural activity into control signals for guiding prosthetic devices or computer cursors. We recently demonstrated that plan activity from premotor cortex, which specifies the endpoint of the upcoming arm movement, can be used to swiftly and accurately guide computer cursors to the desired target locations. However, these systems currently require additional, non-neural information to specify when plan activity is present. We report here the design and performance of state estimator algorithms for automatically detecting the presence of plan activity using neural activity alone. Prosthesis performance was nearly as good when state estimation was used as when perfect plan timing information was provided separately (~5 percentage points lower, when using 200 ms of plan activity). These results strongly suggest that a completely neurally-driven high-performance brain–computer interface is possible.


PACS

87.85.Wc Neural engineering

87.19.rs Movement

07.05.Wr Computer interfaces

87.19.L- Neuroscience

Subjects

Instrumentation and measurement

Medical physics

Biological physics

Dates

Issue 3 (September 2007)

Received 9 June 2007, accepted for publication 1 August 2007

Published 22 August 2007



Users also read

What's this?
This innovative new feature generates a list of articles 'also read' by other users based on them reading the original article. Article abstracts citations and references are all considered and weighted accordingly. We hope that this will help you find relevant papers for your research.

  1. A cortical neural prosthesis for restoring and enhancing memory
  2. Decoding two-dimensional movement trajectories using electrocorticographic signals in humans

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.